15 Early Spring Wildflowers to Watch For
Early spring wildflowers bloom before trees leaf out, taking advantage of sunlight reaching the forest floor. These ephemeral beauties appear in March and April, then disappear by summer. Here are 15 to watch for on spring hikes.
1. Trillium
Bloom: March-May | Color: White, pink, red
Three petals, three leaves. Blooms for 2-3 weeks. Takes 7-10 years to flower from seed.
2. Bloodroot
Bloom: March-April | Color: White
Single flower emerges wrapped in a leaf. Red sap in roots (hence the name). Blooms last only 1-2 days.
3. Spring Beauty
Bloom: March-May | Color: White with pink stripes
Tiny star-shaped flowers carpet forest floors. Edible tubers taste like chestnuts.
4. Hepatica
Bloom: March-April | Color: Blue, pink, white
First wildflower to bloom in many regions. Leaves persist through winter.
5. Dutchman's Breeches
Bloom: April-May | Color: White with yellow tips
Flowers look like tiny pantaloons hanging upside down. Related to bleeding hearts.
6. Virginia Bluebells
Bloom: April-May | Color: Pink buds open to blue
Large clusters of bell-shaped flowers. Goes dormant by June.
7. Trout Lily
Bloom: March-May | Color: Yellow
Mottled leaves resemble brook trout. Only mature plants (7+ years) flower.
8. Jack-in-the-Pulpit
Bloom: April-June | Color: Green and purple striped
Not a true flower - the "pulpit" is a modified leaf. Bright red berries in fall.
9. Wild Ginger
Bloom: April-May | Color: Dark red-brown
Flowers hide under heart-shaped leaves. Roots smell like ginger.
10. Marsh Marigold
Bloom: April-June | Color: Bright yellow
Grows in wet areas. Shiny, waxy petals. Toxic if eaten raw.
11. Columbine
Bloom: April-June | Color: Red and yellow
Spurred flowers attract hummingbirds. Native to rocky slopes.
12. Solomon's Seal
Bloom: April-June | Color: White or greenish
Bell-shaped flowers dangle under arching stems. Blue-black berries later.
13. Mayapple
Bloom: April-June | Color: White
Single flower hides under umbrella-like leaves. Yellow fruit in late summer (edible when ripe, rest of plant toxic).
14. Wood Anemone
Bloom: April-June | Color: White
Delicate 5-petaled flowers. Forms large colonies via rhizomes.
15. Rue Anemone
Bloom: March-May | Color: White or pink
Similar to wood anemone but smaller. Whorled leaves.
Where to Find Them
- Deciduous forests: Most spring wildflowers thrive under hardwood trees
- Rich, moist soil: Look in ravines, near streams, on north-facing slopes
- Undisturbed areas: Old-growth forests have the most diversity
Foraging Ethics
- Never pick: Many species take decades to mature. Enjoy, photograph, leave.
- Stay on trails: Trampling destroys habitat.
- No digging: Removing plants from wild is illegal in most states.